Should have left me / GORDON



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Current Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko called the French president an “immature” politician, and recommended that he resign in connection with the protests in Belarus.

French President Emmanuel Macron, who said that Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko must voluntarily resign from power, must resign himself.

This opinion was expressed by Lukashenka, whose reply was relayed by his press service on September 27 to the Belarusian state news agency BELTA.

“As president of the country, starting from the principles of Mr. Macron himself (established in his declaration-call to resign), I want to say that the president of France, following his own logic, should have resigned two years ago, when he was in the streets from Paris. The “yellow vests” have only just begun to appear. Years go by, the “vests” are still on the streets, Mr. Macron is surprisingly still in office, and France has become a country where mass protests they have become commonplace, “Lukashenka said in a statement.

The President of Belarus also recalled “the problems that arise periodically from France with the BLM movement and the Muslim protests in Marseille and Lyon” and proposed Minsk as a negotiating platform for this.

“Second. As a seasoned politician, for an immature one, I would like to advise Mr. Macron to look less and instead finally deal with the internal affairs of France.”

He also believes that “Macron pays too much attention to one of the former presidential candidates in Belarus.”

“Considering that this former candidate is a lady, the French leader runs the risk of having personal problems also in France, at home,” Lukashenka said in a statement.

In an interview with Le Journal du Dimanche, published on September 26, Macron said that Belarus faces a crisis from an authoritarian regime that “cannot accept the logic of democracy.” The president of France said that the president of Belarus “must go.”

Lukashenka September 23 took over as president for the sixth time. The opening ceremony was held in secret at the Minsk Independence Palace. For the first time in the history of Belarus was not announced… Contrary to legal requirements, the ceremony not televised.

Lukashenka’s inauguration took place in the context of the massive protests that have been taking place in the country since August 9. The participants of the demonstrations believe that the voting results in the presidential elections in Belarus were falsified. According to official data, Lukashenka won with 80.1% of the voters. Opposition candidate Tikhanovskaya came in second with 10.1% of the vote. At the same time, alternative exit polls showed the opposite picture: Tikhanovskaya’s confident victory.

The Belarusian security forces harshly dispersed the discontents who took to the streets. They applied explosions, rubber bullets and water cannons… During the protests, more than 10 thousand protesters, hundreds were wounded and wounded. According to official figures, killed four protesters.

After the secret inauguration of Lukashenka, the residents of Belarus also protested. The police used water cannons against them.

Several states, including the United States, Great Britain, Canada, Germany, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, Poland, Denmark and the Czech Republic, did not recognize Lukashenko’s inauguration. Kuleba said Lukashenka’s swearing in does not mean his recognition as the legitimate head of the Belarusian state.



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